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[[File:GalenusAngels_of_the_Underground_.jpg|thumbnail|left|175px]]==[[What was Angels of the dominant medical sect in the United States during the 19th Century?Underground: Interview with Theresa Kaminski]]==Nineteenth-century medicine was characterized by constant competition among three major medical sectsThe Oxford University Press recently published Theresa Kaminski's Angels of the Underground: Regulars, Eclectics, and HomeopathsThe American Women who Resisted the Japanese in the Philippines in World War II.[1] Each Kaminski's book follows the lives of these medical sects not only meaningfully disagreed on how to treat illnesses and diseases, but sought to portray their type of practice as four American women who were stranded in the most effective and scientificPhilippines after Japan invaded during World War II. Arguably none of the three sects was superior to the others, but their adherents concluded Publishers Weekly described her book as a "fast-paced true story" that their sectarian beliefs were better than their competitorsdocuments how these women resisted Japanese occupation.{{Read more|What was Angels of the dominant medical sect in the United States during the 19th Century?Underground: Interview with Theresa Kaminski}}
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[[File:Battle_of_Vicksburg,_Kurz_and_AllisonGalenus.pngjpg|thumbnail|left|thumb|150px175px]]==[[Why Was Vicksburg “The Gibraltar of What was the dominant medical sect in the United States during the Confederacy19th Century?]]==As the calendar flipped from June to July in 1863 GettysburgNineteenth-century medicine was characterized by constant competition among three major medical sects: Regulars, a small market town founded in the softEclectics, rolling hills and Homeopaths.[1] Each of south central Pennsylvania these medical sects not only meaningfully disagreed on Samuel Gettys farm half a century beforehow to treat illnesses and diseases, was unknown but sought to portray their type of practice as the most Americanseffective and scientific. Four days later, on July 4Arguably none of the three sects was superior to the others, it had become "The Most Famous Small Town in America," as boosters would come to call itbut their adherents concluded that their sectarian beliefs were better than their competitors.{{Read more|Why Was Vicksburg “The Gibraltar of What was the dominant medical sect in the United States during the Confederacy19th Century?}}
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